The benchmark S&P500 index hasn't suffered a decline of 3% or more for nearly 11 months, the 2nd longest run in history. It's been the calmest and least volatile year in Wall Street's history. The cost of purchasing insurance against a general market decline – the Volatility Index (VIX) – ended the month of September at 9.51, its lowest monthly close in history.

There have been no bargain hunting opportunities. That's created a dilemma for anyone trying to "buy on the dips". In fact, waiting for a -3% pullback has caused many investors to miss out on the S&P's 14% gains and the Nasdaq's 24% gains so far this year.

Buy the dip? What dip?

The S&P500 index has notched 38 record highs this year. It's gone 228 trading days without suffering a -3% pullback, the second-longest stretch since 1950 and longest since 1995-1996. The large-company stock index hasn't suffered a "pullback" or decline of 5% or more for 15 months, when Britain surprised investors by voting to exit the European Union. You have to go back to the early-year sell-off in 2016 for the market's last official correction, or 10% plunge.

While this type of parabolic surge is great news for investors already in the market and are now ready for early retirement, it has caused hesitation for investors that are looking to get in – out of fear of buying at a top.

The "absence of pullbacks" is perhaps the biggest story of the year. Pullbacks, history shows, are normal, common occurrences. Since 1950, the S&P500 index has suffered declines of 3% or more 4.3 times per year on average, and 5% pullbacks at a rate of 2.5 times per year.

But there have been none so far this year. The biggest drawdown was a 2.8% decline.

Some traders say investing in the stock market has become as easy as depositing monies in a money market fund, with a guarantee of a return of principal, plus an undisclosed rate of return. The S&P500 index is now on track to provide a positive return for the ninth straight year. The S&P 500 has been positive (on a total return basis) for 11 consecutive months and 18 out of the last 19 months.

With their massive money-printing schemes and ultra-low interest rates, the central banks have taken all of the risk out of investing. Some analysts now say, the biggest risk is not be involved in the stock markets. Since the fallout over the vote for Brexit in June 2016, the collective value of the world's Top 43 stock markets has increased by a stunning $29 trillion.

The Dow Jones Industrials have surged a staggering 5,500 points higher since the Brexit lows in June 2016 and the raging bulls have downplayed the Fed's warning that it plans to hike the federal funds rate at either the upcoming November or December meetings. The Fed's "Dots Matrix" showed 11 of 16 Fed officials see the "appropriate" level for the federal funds rate to be in a range between 1.25% and 1.50% by the end of 2017.

The Fed also envisions three hikes in 2018 to as high as 2.125%. However, traders in the fed funds futures markets disagree with the Fed's predictions, and see only 2 rate hikes by the end of 2018 to the 1.625% mid-point level. That's a half-percent below the Fed's estimates.

The Fed also said it would begin "Quantitative Tightening" this October – a process of draining excess liquidity in the money markets by reducing the size of its $4.5-trillion in holdings of US Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities.

The Fed will start QT with baby steps, initially draining $10 billion each month from the amount of maturing securities it reinvests. QT is scheduled to increase by $10 billion every three months to a maximum of $50 billion per month until the central bank's overall balance sheet falls by as much as $2 trillion or more in the years ahead.

However QE schemes led by Europe and Japan are key drivers behind the parabolic increases in the US and global equity markets. But now the ECB is ready to start slowing the pace of its money printing operations, starting in January. So there will be plenty of drama in the months and year ahead.

GARY DORSCH is editor of the Global Money Trends newsletter. He worked as chief financial futures analyst for three clearing firms on the trading floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange before moving to the US and foreign equities trading desk of Charles Schwab and Co.

There he traded across 45 different exchanges, including Australia, Canada, Japan, Hong Kong, the Eurozone, London, Toronto, South Africa, Mexico and New Zealand. With extensive experience of forex, US high grade and corporate junk bonds, foreign government bonds, gold stocks, ADRs, a wide range of US equities and options as well as Canadian oil trusts, he wrote from 2000 to Sept. '05 a weekly newsletter, Foreign Currency Trends, for Charles Schwab's Global Investment department.

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